Profiling gene expression in endothelial cells advances the understanding of normal vascular physiology and disease processes involving angiogenesis. However, endothelial cell purification has been challenging because of the difficulty of isolating cells and their low abundance. Here we examine gene expression in endothelial cells freshly isolated from lung capillaries after in vivo labeling with fluorescent cationic liposomes and purification by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). Of the 39,000 genes and expressed sequence tags evaluated on custom oligonucleotide arrays, 555 were enriched in endothelial cell fraction. These included familiar endothelial cell-associated genes such as VEGF, VEGF receptor (VEGFR)-1, VEGFR-2, angiopoietin-2, Tie1, Tie2, Edg1 receptor, VE-cadherin, claudin 5, connexin37, CD31, and CD34. Also enriched were genes in semaphorin/neuropilin (Sema3c and Nrp1), ephrin/Eph (ephrin A1, B1, B2, and EphB4), delta/notch (Hey1, Jagged 2, Notch 1, Notch 4, Numb, and Siah1b), and Wingless (Frizzled-4 and Tle1) signaling pathways involved in vascular development and angiogenesis. Expression of representative genes in alveolar capillary endothelial cells was verified by immunohistochemistry. Such expression reflects features that endothelial cells of normal lung capillaries have in common with embryonic and growing blood vessels. About half of the enriched genes, including exostosin 2, lipocalin 7, phospholipid scramblase 2, pleckstrin 2, protocadherin 1, Ryk, scube 1, serpinh1, SNF-related kinase, and several tetraspanins, had little or no previous association with endothelial cells. This approach can readily be used to profile genes expressed in blood vessels in tumors, chronic inflammation, and other sites in which endothelial cells avidly take up cationic liposomes.
1. Chronic inflammation is associated with blood vessel remodelling, including vessel proliferation and enlargement, and changes in vessel phenotype. We sought to characterize these changes in chronic airway inflammation and to determine whether corticosteroids that inhibit inflammation, such as dexamethasone, can also reduce microvascular remodelling. 2. Chronic airway inflammation was induced in C3H mice by infection with Mycoplasmapulmonis and the tracheal vessels treatment also decreased the immunoreactivity for P-selectin and the number of adherent leucocytes (595 +/- 203 vs 2,024 +/- 393 cells/ mm2 in treated and non-treated infected mice, respectively). 6. We conclude that microvascular enlargement and changes in vessel phenotype are features of some types of chronic inflammation and, furthermore, that dexamethasone reverses the microvascular enlargement, changes in vessel phenotype and leucocyte influx associated with chronic inflammatory airway disease.
Fetal chest masses are rare lesions that can be detected on prenatal sonography. This report of three cases of bilateral fetal chest masses (two bilateral congenital cystic adenomatoid malformations of the lung and one case of bilateral pulmonary sequestrations) serves to emphasize the occasional occurrence of bilateral masses and the variability in prognoses.
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